Posts Tagged ‘Pop Music’

Is a Generational Shift Making Pop Music Less Taboo in ‘New Music’?

Posted by Brian on Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

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Last week’s post pondering whether the current ‘indie / alt-classical’ ‘movement’ was just a fad elicited some smart comments, including this one from composer / performer Matt Marks:

IMO most of the ‘compromise’ young composers make is in making sure their music sounds ‘uncompromising’. What’s unique about the ‘alt-classical’ scene is that these composers are no longer forcing their music to sound ‘challenging’ and are rather letting it sound like the music they (we) grew up with: pop. This seems to be the main difference between earlier generations and ours. They added (forced?) pop flavor into their pieces. We are simply allowing it to naturally come out.

Matt’s comment points to a generational difference between the way ‘classical’ composers handle and have handled encounters with pop music. Does this have anything to do with how composition is taught at institutions of ‘higher learning’? Is pop music taboo in academic composition departments?

popSecretBy now everyone knows that one of the biggest trends to emerge in new music recently has been the synthesis of elements of pop, rock, hip-hop, electronica, and all gradations of popular music in between. Of course, using pop and rock influences in new music is nothing new; the origins of minimalism are rooted in the rock music of the 1960s, and post-minimalists, like the folks of Bang On A Can, have been at it for at least a couple decades now. But in the last 10 years, and especially the past 5 years, this practice has become undeniably mainstream. I think a lot of this has to do with generational shifts at institutions of higher learning; a literal ‘out with the old and in with the new’ changing of the guard.

Composers, correct me if I’m wrong, but it seems to me that in the past when a student went to college to study music composition, they were more or less required by those in charge of their compositional development to check their pop music influences at the door. Though you could be a pop music fan, there really wasn’t any place for that sort of trite, repetitive music in the realm of “serious” music composition so composers were passive-aggressively required to repress these lascivious musical tastes; a sort of elitist musical don’t ask, don’t tell (and certainly don’t you dare write music like that!) policy.

But now, times they are a changin’, and popular music influences in the ivory tower don’t seem to be quite as taboo as they once were. Far from repressing the coming-of-age music of their teenage years, a new generation of composers is embracing those influences with exceptional vigor and working to create a new musical hybrid. As you might expect, there have been various approaches to contributing to the zeitgeist.

Some composers and ensembles have taken the juxtaposition of classical meets pop very literally. For example, have you heard Metallica played by four cellos? How about Aphex Twin arranged for chamber ensemble?

Is there value in this sort of literal translation?
Will these ‘experiments’ create anything lasting?
R they PR ‘stunts’?
Who will be the next ‘relevant’ electronica artist 4 ‘indie / alt-classicists’ to ‘transcribe’?
If ur a composer and u ‘remix’ yourself is that ‘meta’ or resourceful?
What r some other ways ‘indie-classicists’ r ‘synthesizing’ pop music with ‘classical rigor’?
R u more ‘free’ as a composer now because the ‘old guard’ is leaving academia?
If u went 2 a college / university / conservatory that discouraged u from ‘synthesizing’ pop music in ur songs r u mad?
Did u ‘butt heads’ with ur comp teacher?

Lady Gaga Mines Bach’s Catalog to Write Her Hits

Posted by Brian on Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

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In advance of Lady Gaga’s appearance on Good Morning America last Wednesday, George Stephanopoulos issued a call for questions:

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To which Shia Kapos, a lifestyle reporter/blogger for Crain’s Chicago Business, responded:

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Then Kristine Farra (N.B. I don’t know these people) replied to Shia Kapos’s reply to @GStephanopoulos and also made an interesting pronouncement about classical music:

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I wasn’t really sure how @KristineFarra made the jump from Gaga to classical music, but it appears to be widespread public knowledge that Gaga took some classical piano lessons and may or may not be an actual classically-trained pianist. I Googled that.

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Which ultimately led me to this article from the FemaleFirst website which talks about how Lady Gaga hated her real name. After she tells you why she despises her real name—she was “fed up with people yelling about 800 names at me every day”—she talks about the impact classical music had on her. There’s also this pullquote:

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WHOAWHOAWHOA there, classical music cognoscenti! Before you go all ganging up on Gaga for her “grossly misguided statement” about the relationship between popular music and grand master Bach, consider for a moment that she’s digging on Bach and taking something away from it. Just cuz there are no free counterpoint or false expositions in “Just Dance”—or that she might not be able to composer a bona fide fugue—doesn’t diminish the fact that it’s some kind of source of inspiration. That’s cool. Hey, I’ve heard that a lot of new music composers these days are maybe like using their pop music influences in their music. I don’t hear Lady Gaga or Ke$ha bitching at you.

But let’s get back to @KristineFarra’s decree that classical music only gets u success after death. I know that there are some people in the classical music field who actually believe this. It’s a way for them to reconcile the fact that nobody pays attention to their music now—well, they’d tell you that it’s “overlooked.” It’s a delusion that promises them fame in the afterlife when some musicologist in the future tries desperately to find a composer from the past nobody has ever heard of so he/she can publish an article in some journal only other musicologists read in order to display their prowess in the library stacks. Then, based on this innovative research discovery, there will be renewed interest in this composer’s music. More scholarly articles will be published. People will discuss performance practices related to this composer’s music. Their obscure duet for flute and bassoon will enter both instruments’ standard repertory and be included in countless doctoral music students’ annotated bibliography dissertation projects. There will be festivals of their music. One of their melodies will inspire a composition student to compose a “Variations on a Theme by…” piece that will be performed exactly once on their university composers’ forum concert. But none of this will matter to the composer whose music all this fuss is over because they will be DEAD! Hey, whatever keeps ya going.

But now onto the second part of Ms. Farra’s tweetcree:

Talent + uniqueness + marketing = now.

That’s an equation I assume she was applying to Gaga’s supposed background as a classically-trained pianist, which she supposedly ditched to be a famous pop star now. There’s no reason that equation needs to follow logically from the I-won’t-make-it-in-classical-music-until-I’m-dead-and-gone-so-I’ll-become-a-pop-star train of logic. No, I think that equation can be applied just as well to someone who wants to try and make an impact in classical/new music. More and more folks in the industry are starting to get the hang of that. Is anything wrong with that or are we just becoming a bunch of sellouts?

Poop to Not Poop Ratios

Posted by Brian on Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

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If the pie charts tell us one thing for certain, it’s that new music is a niche market. I mean, since the ratio of Poop to Not Poop in both New Music and Pop Music is equal (+/- 1%, of course), then it stands to reason that the skewed popularity ratio between New Music and Pop Music is not the result of Pop Music possessing greater quantities of Not Poop, but rather that Pop Music is, well, more popular. Question: Is there anything wrong with being a niche market? Think about it, but also think about the following quote from this mostly Not Poop post via the Proper Discord blog:

“All too often, we confuse ‘niche’ with ‘endangered’ when in truth the top end of any market is usually quite unpopular. Mercedes Benz has a 3% share of the US car market. They aren’t worried about extinction. Why should we be scared?”

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Before going any further, let’s highlight some of the similarities between Mercedes Benz and Classical/New Music. A Mercedes Benz is a solid, well-crafted, finely-tuned machine. Classical musicians are highly-trained and capable of great precision. A Mercedes Benz is expensive. So too are tickets to many classical music concerts. People who can afford a Mercedes Benz are generally part of an elite social caste. People who like classical music are stereotyped as being elite. So with all the similarity, why doesn’t Classical/New Music share the same sort of niche market perks as Mercedes Benz? Here’s one possible reason:

mercedes-snob

I don’t think being a niche market is all that bad. (N.B. This is coming from a lifelong Red Sox fan. Translation: I have been raised to root for the underdog.) I also don’t believe that being a niche market means being headed for extinction. Ain’t gonna happen. Too many people pay too much money to go to college and learn the craft of classical music to let that knowledge just sit around and rot in their heads. We’ve just got to do a better job getting that information out there in a manner that says, “Hey, this is neat. You should listen to it,” and not, “Hey, I’m way smarter than you.” Are there ways we can change from perceptions of elitism so that we might move away from snob characterization to hot chick characterization?

It’s also not impossible that a niche market gains a following, becomes more popular, and then more mainstream. Remember MTV in the 1990s? That whole alternative music, Seattle grunge scene thing? But if mainstream acceptance like that happens you’ve got to be prepared for name calling (“SELLOUT!”) and the possible loss of the music’s true soul and quality. Surely there are ways to have your cake and eat it too. Right?